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What You Can Do With Elderberry

From free moves this week up to the deep plays.

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Pick elderflowers for cordial

  • Nutritional
  • Free food

In June, look for flat creamy flower heads with a honey smell on a warm day. Strip the tiny flowers from the green stalks, steep with sugar, lemon, and a little citric acid, and bottle.

Pick on a dry day for the strongest scent, and do not rinse the flowers.

Make elderflower champagne

  • Culinary
  • First ferment

The wild yeast living on the petals will ferment a light, fizzy drink with almost no equipment. A flower head, sugar, water, lemon, and a few days.

Do not wash the flowers. The yeast you need lives on them.

Cook a winter elderberry syrup

  • Medicinal
  • Pantry

In September, strip the ripe near-black berries off every green stalk and simmer them down with honey. The result is the traditional cold-season syrup.

Cooking is not optional. Raw berries and the green stalks are toxic.

Plant a hedge from a cutting

  • Economic
  • Self-sufficiency

In winter, take pencil-thick cuttings from dormant wood and push them two-thirds into the ground where you want the tree. They root and grow fast. A free hedge from a stick.

Take a few extra cuttings. Some will not take, and spares cost nothing.

Sell or trade cordial and syrup

  • Economic
  • Market stall

The cordial and syrup market is real and sells every year. A few productive bushes can supply a stall, with the flower and the berry as two separate seasonal products.

Label each batch with its harvest month. Spring flower and autumn berry are different lines.